Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
The Dependency Theory
1.
2. Some Background
• Developed by a U.N. director, Raul
Prebisch
o In response to concern over disparities in
development worldwide
• Peripheral countries
o nations that are "weaker", or less developed
o eg. Haiti
• Core countries
o nations that have major influence, and are the
most developed
o eg. France, United States
3. What is the Theory?
• Dependency is...
"...an historical condition which shapes a certain structure of the world
economy such that it favors some countries to the detriment of others and
limits the development possibilities of the subordinate economics."
("The Structure of Dependency" p.226)
• Peripheral nations are dependent on core
countries
o Dependent nations' development will remain
stagnant while core nations will continue to develop
5. Case Study: Haiti
• A "peripheral" nation
• Belonged to France from
1660 to 1804
• During French rule, produced 60% of Europe's coffee
and 40% of its sugar
• Much of population was, and still is, impoverished
• 2010 earthquake
o Destruction of much of its existing infrastructure
o United States response to earthquake was praised
o Haiti remains in dependent, peripheral status
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fe/Haiti_(orthographic_projection).svg/250px-
Haiti_(orthographic_projection).svg.png
6. Strengths Weaknesses
• Simplicity
• Promotion of core
• Worldwide theory
•
dominance
• Has multiple
Limited definition of
development
applications
• Cynical
• Too simple!
http://www.philgalfond.com/w
p-content/uploads/ethics-
scale.jpg
7. Bibliograph
y
• (Theotonio Dos Santos, "The Structure of
Dependence," in K.T. Fann and Donald C.
Hodges, eds., Readings in U.S. Imperialism.
Boston: Porter Sargent, 1971, p. 226)
• https://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/depend.htm
• http://pics3441.upmf-
grenoble.fr/articles/inde/Dependency%20Theory%
20A%20Critique.pdf
• http://hdr.undp.org/en/data/trends/